Tag Archives: literature

We areÂ a low-profit publisher based out of Brattleboro dedicated to telling stories that will make the world a better place. Specifically, Green Writers Press is uplifting regional and national voices that embrace the natural world and interrogate the destruction of it.

PARTNER WITH US:
GWP is an L3C or a â€ślow-profit limited liability companyâ€ť which is a for-profit business that holds a charitable or educational cause as its main purpose. The business embodies our mission from our choice of printers (US printers that utilize renewable energy, forest stewardship council-certified papers, and soy-based inks) to our donation of a percentage of profits to national and Vermont-based environmental organizations.

Our vision is that collectively, our books will become a chorus of voices of writers and readers, artists and photographers, who care about the fate of the earth and want to do something about it.

If anyone knows of a non-profit 501 (c) 3 organization you think would like to partner with us as an L3C company, please tell them about us! It is tax-free for them to work with us on publications/books.

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AND NOW . . . SUMMER NEWS:
Green Writers Press is growing, but we are still primarily a VOLUNTEER RUN ORGANIZATION. We could not do what we do without our dedicated cadre of freelance editors!Â Please welcome our newest freelancer/volunteer staff members.

MARGARETÂ SWEENEY, AssistantÂ EditorÂ and PublicityMargaret Sweeney is a native of Brattleboro, Vermont and a recent graduate of Bennington College, where she studied literature and writing. While at Bennington, she interned for the literary organizations Poets House and the Center for the Art of TranslationÂ and served as co-editor-in-chief ofÂ plain china,Â the first national anthology of undergraduate student writing. She now lives in Western MassachusettsÂ and works as a part-time bookseller at Odyssey Bookshop in South Hadley.

JAMES CREWS, Â Assistant Editor

James Crews’ work has appeared inÂ Ploughshares, Raleigh Review, Crab Orchard ReviewÂ andÂ The New Republic, among other journals, and he is a regular contributor toÂ The (London) Times Literary Supplement.Â His first collection of poetry,Â The Book of What Stays, won the 2010 Prairie Schooner Book Prize and received aÂ ForewordÂ MagazineÂ Book of the Year Award. Other awards include residencies from the Sitka Center for the Arts and Caldera Arts as well as two Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Prizes. He holds an MFA in Creative Writing-Poetry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and aÂ PhDÂ in Writing and Literature from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he worked for Ted Kooser’sÂ American Life in PoetryÂ newspaper column and grew to love the Great Plains. He now lives on an organic farm in Shaftsbury, Vermont just a few miles from the Robert Frost Stone House.

Here at Green Writers Press, we are busy planning our Spring Book launch set for April 24th at 3:00 PM at Next Stage Arts in Putney. We are also busy celebrating all things African-American and honoring our newest authors who write so eloquently about race and the struggle for equality. We join the Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum join in paying tribute to the generations of African Americans who struggled with adversity to achieve full citizenship in American society.

We’d like to tell you about a few books that we are honored to publishâ€”one is just out this past year, and the other forthcoming in 2016!

Blackberries and Cream is the compassionate and insightful story of a young white girl balancing her love for her African-American caregiver and her depressed mother in 1960s Alabama. Full of Southern charm and subtle wisdom, this novel explores the meanings of love, family,Â and courage in a heartfelt coming-of-age tale that will resonate with children and adults alike. This novel comes at a poignant moment in our society when racial prejudices still linger and the challenges to diversity in children’s literature remain difficult to confront. Blackberries and Cream is perfectly suited to help cultivate awareness about these issues, inspiring meaningful reflection and discussion in young readers. It is 210 pages long and can be considered childrenâ€™s fiction (middle grade to young adult readers) and historical fiction. We are hoping readers will spread the word.Â

This photo is from twenty years ago, of the author Leslie Rivver and her caregiver Ida Bell, who are the main characters in this semi-autobiographical novel we are promoting during Black History Month.Â â€Ş#â€ŽBlackHistoryMonthâ€¬

PRAISE
â€śBrimming with wisdom and mischief, this tender, heartfelt celebration of an abiding friendship between a white girl and her black caregiver in 1960s Alabama reminds us that the love we experience in childhood has the power to sustain us through a lifetime of change.â€ť
â€“Irene Latham, author ofÂ Leaving Geeâ€™s Bend

We are also thrilled to announce the upcoming story collection byÂ Clarence Major. Chicago Heat and Other StoriesÂ employs a gorgeous purity and simplicity of language in a series of masterful analyses examining human interaction. Each narrative voice comes forward all at once, individual and complete, without obstacle or complication, enabling the reader to see the characters and feel their emotions. Major does not shy away from the bitter or the harsh; we get to hear it all. Like paint on an easel he blends lyricality with moxie and the blunt with the beautiful. The characters come together as easily as they part; people leaving, coming back, going, stayingâ€”it all sticks and fades like heat on your skin. The imagery is completely accessible and generously given. Toni Morrison comes to mind. His work is like jewels.

Clarence Major’s list of works and achievements is an impressive one. From awards like the Pushcart Prize and National Book AwardÂ to fellowships like the Fulbright Fellowship and National Council for the Arts Fellowship, Clarence Major has established himself as a prominent literary figure. Having written more than eight novels, includingÂ My AmputationsÂ andÂ Dirty Bird Blues,Â alongside a dozen books of poetry,Â Chicago Heat and Other StoriesÂ is only his second work of short fiction and first book with Green Writers Press.

CLARENCE MAJOR is a prizewinning short story writer, novelist, poet and painter. As a finalist for the National Book Award he won a Bronze Medal for his bookÂ Configurations: New and Selected Poems 1958-1998. Â Major was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, The Bay Area Book Reviewers Book Award and The Prix Maurice Coindreau in France. He is the recipient of The Western States Book Award, The National Council on The Arts Award, a New York Cultural Foundation Award, The Stephen Henderson Poetry Award for Outstanding Achievement (African-American Literature and Culture Society of The American Literature Association), the Sister Circle Book Award, two Pushcart prizes, the International Literary Hall of Fame Award (Chicago State University), the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award in the Fine Arts, presented by the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, and other awards. He is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of California at Davis.

PRAISE FOR THE WORK OF CLARENCE MAJORâ€śClarence Major has a remarkable mind and the talent to match.â€ťÂ Â Â Â â€”Toni Morrisonâ€śA pioneer on the cutting edge of contemporary fiction.â€ť â€”Charles Johnsonâ€ś[Majorâ€™s] language is both lyric and precise.Â His vision is both humorous . . . and serious.
His story is our own.â€ť Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â â€”National Book Award Finalist/citation forÂ Configurations

â€śClarence Majorâ€™sâ€¦ gathering of short stories has extraordinary technical and emotional force, that pushes the form to its contemporary limits without losing contact with its sources in legend, tall-tale,Â conte, yarnâ€¦Majorâ€¦proves that he is one of only a handful of American writers capable of doing significant work in more than one genre.â€ť â€”Russell Banks

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Thanks for helping us spread the word about our growing press, especially the authors that help all of us celebrate our freedom and social justice, and foster increased awareness in environmental sustainability. Here is an eloquent quote from Clarence Major in support of our work at the press:

One of the most pressing issues for all of humanity is the environment, namely climate change.Â I would like to support efforts to bring about awareness of the problem. We are running out of time. â€”Clarence Major

The People’s Climate March
Green Writers Press authors and editors were down in NYC in full force with the rest of the world watching as 1% of Vermonters and almost half a million people marched for Climate Justice! We are proud beyond words to have been asked to carry the Vermont flag. Here are some photos from The Marchâ€”one of Dede Cummings and Vermont-Irish poet from our book, So Little Time, Greg Delanty! Please share and keep the momentum going….March On!

So Little Time had its inaugural reading at St. Michael’s College in Colchester, Vermont, on January 30th. Here is a gallery of photos of the various poets who read from Gloria Seidler, wife of poet Ralph Culver and aÂ nature photographer as well as a holistic healer. Gloria donated these great photos to us as GWP!